If your company is looking to collaborate with industry peers on the latest advancements in the aerospace market, SpaceCom is for you! Enhance your capabilities and discover a new group of collaborators for building your business. At SpaceCom you will:

Build partnerships with international businesses.

Be part of one of the largest gatherings of NASA personnel attending a civilian space conference.

Aerospace Overview

The aerospace industry is very competitive domestically and internationally. Recent technological advancements make the industry even more exciting.

The cost of launch technologies has been reduced considerably by manufacturing efficiencies and the imminent prospect of the routine re-usability of the orbital class boosters.

The number of launch service providers is increasing:

Congress and the Administration are supportive of developing a robust commercial space sector

The weight and size of the payloads necessary to accomplish tasks in space have been reduced, further reducing the price per kilogram of launch

Venture capital and private equity markets are investing heavily because they now see a future of real returns within realistic time periods from space investments.

These changes and the business opportunities they represent have been the subject of SpaceCom in 2015, 2016, and 2017.

In 2018, the SpaceCom conference program focuses even more intently on the buying sectors for space-based services, reciprocal technology transfer between industries and business opportunities in microgravity environments. PLUS, we will take a deep dive into the future marketplace being created beyond LEO in the cislunar environment. Your peers and competitors who attend SpaceCom are exposed to new ideas and thinking that will give them a competitive advantage.

Applications in Action

“It means you can fly and re-fly an orbital class booster, which I the most expensive part of the rocket. This is going to be, ultimately a huge revolution I spaceflight.”Elon Musk, SpaceX March 30 2017 on the successful re-landing of its booster at Kennedy Space Center.

“The prospect of a lunar mission has several companies lining up to provide, not just transportation but also habitats, science experiments and even the ability to mine the Moon for resources.” The Washington Post, March 3, 2017

Related Links

The launch and simultaneous landing of SpaceX Falcon Heavy side boosters in February 2018